pirates
Electrical
- Mar 2, 2005
- 8
So I have a reciprocating refrigeration compressor that is attached to a 250kW motor. For various reasons it has been decided that the compressor should no longer be run at 1480rpm and that it should be stepped down to 1000rpm. For various reasons I ended up with a drive which I believe is too small. Whenever I have asked various people if there still is a workable solution the usual answer has been “try to determine what the motor amps are for long term operation and what they might be for short term upsets etc. compare this with the drive manufacturers claims” Here is where I came stuck not really knowing how to work this out. Now I think I have the answer and really need clarification as to if my workings (methodology) are correct.
From the compressor manufacturer I obtained Absorbed power figure(Pe=164.4kW) at the RPM (1000) that we want to run this compressor. Using these figures, the electrical data from the motor ( 250kW 400VAC 50hz 440A 1480rpm cos0.86 efficiency0.95 or 95%)
and the formula Amps = I deduced the following: guessing that we would need a frequency of around 34Hz to attain 1000rpm (IS THIS CORRECT) and keeping the same Volt/Freq ratio as 400:50 I came up with a volt/freq ratio of 272:34 substituting these figures I calculated out that amps needed were 427 amps.
IS THIS CORRECT??
If this is the correct answer then I now know that the drive is way too small. The other problem is the short term upsets. The drive manufacturer has overload claims of 139% for 60 seconds but this is at 400volts. So how do I bring this down to the 272volts that the drive should be operating at?
I would really appreciate any help with this problem.
From the compressor manufacturer I obtained Absorbed power figure(Pe=164.4kW) at the RPM (1000) that we want to run this compressor. Using these figures, the electrical data from the motor ( 250kW 400VAC 50hz 440A 1480rpm cos0.86 efficiency0.95 or 95%)
and the formula Amps = I deduced the following: guessing that we would need a frequency of around 34Hz to attain 1000rpm (IS THIS CORRECT) and keeping the same Volt/Freq ratio as 400:50 I came up with a volt/freq ratio of 272:34 substituting these figures I calculated out that amps needed were 427 amps.
IS THIS CORRECT??
If this is the correct answer then I now know that the drive is way too small. The other problem is the short term upsets. The drive manufacturer has overload claims of 139% for 60 seconds but this is at 400volts. So how do I bring this down to the 272volts that the drive should be operating at?
I would really appreciate any help with this problem.